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Mark N's avatar

So, as an ambassador for a company that makes lights, belts, and vests I will share this...last week someone w/in our nonpublic FB group (who was less familiar with ultra distances on trails) coincidentally found the new UT Whistler race and wanted feedback regarding it as a introductory race for his indoctrination into the sport. He must have felt like Icarus getting too close to the sun. Those of us in the know were eager to be supportive and helpful to encourage his interest in ultras, but we shared with robust assuredness , this destination race was not the way to go! And though it was not contentious, I think he got the message as he was looking at alternatives. Enough on that...but... people looking at this sport right now, without any background need some mentorship to navigate some of this. I say this not to be pedantic, but more to underscore why the fate of the sport requires some forbearance and open dialog to shed light on why UTMB should be put on notice. It is a watershed moment. Sara, as always, you are deftly sharing asides that are helpful and keen. It is aided by opinions (that we all have, and should share dispassionately) that come from personal and professional sensibilities. Much like Megan Hicks has reported on IRUNFAR.

Anyway, openly sharing on the processes, ethics,, etc, on the overtures UTMB and Vail collaborated on are worthy of some ink. Firstly, most opinions I have encountered have been disciplined. From my campfire, what I see, are people that care deeply about the sport, its future, and are attempting to find clarity to sustain growth. Most place a priority to do as much as we can to not compromise RDs organizing small venues at a grass root levels and bandwagon that same amt. of support for larger scale entities like J Coury's events that (now are bi-coastal) have more media rich coverage. Even when you take in account a bias most of us have to a well-known and highly regarded source like Gary Robbins (I just know him from Barkley and a few on air interviews w/Ginger Runner a while back) the discussion is not malice based. It is warranted though and it is in response to the disproportioned resources Ironman can bring to bear. It is a meta-view on issues that are critical. Like everyone that pricked up their ears once this story dropped, I wanted to get some balanced reporting first on the Whistler fallout, esp. since I see growth as good. I know how sponsorships help the athletes I like to follow (and elites that are my friends are part of my bias, frankly). I am on the side of boycotting UTMB all said, but that is fluid and not deeply embedded...there are opportunities for this to be a teachable moment to reform what is going on and speak out in the interim to get the rudder re-set ultimately. Until then, UTMB is a pariah and fair game to get shunned. It would be unprecedented for major players and businesses to get involved though. I dont think the elites have much they can do, it's a thin sampling of folks. Consumers have more power to post up and defend the opposition. And that starts with letting the companies that profit from it know. The races are easy to find, as are open trails any day of the week, so that is a bit of a diluted impact. That said, and let's be honest, if you have a pair of Hokas, Altra, or Salomons in your closet (or whatever floats your boat) and profit from advancements in the quality of the product well, that is a matter of health and safety. Real difficult "ask" to put some pressure and impact on an industry that depends on volume of sales keep running on them to gain traction on this UTMB issue. And trail running is a niche, so it is a quandary concurrent to a tenuous juggling act (esp. post pandemic) to keep legacy races intact and sustain them. Yikes.

It complicates the goal I hear most speaking out on, espousing and searching out a way forward to bring people together. And doing so locally and at destination events that build a consensus where ultra and subultra trail running is your why! So important and empowering. It binds us. But it will take time and some tone deaf events like Whistler to fix our sights on long term growth hopefully not at the expense of more RDs like Gary. This is too long winded...sorry. I have a lot on my mind outside of this too...election forecasts for next year (WTF), looking for bright spots etc. friends experiencing setbacks in more profound life events...it blunts issues like this but I care about running. It is my constant polestar so I wont hesitate to support anyone that is part of the grand pursuit of lacing shoes to shake it out. No qualifications needed to put some thought into something that elevates us so I am forever on the SLS team eager to hear or read on this subject w/o reservation. True, the need to be self critical and be aware of global problems is a priority, well-stated, and I am totally onboard. But your readers know the quality of your character and it is never in doubt. Best of the best. But, as I tend to bury the point more than 6 feet under, in closing, events that celebrate and unify us should inspire us to share since that is what enriches us. The reciprocal effect of it is this, it is what will sustain us in the long run...and now, Mark is out of O2....gasp! And I am not proofing this so if I hit send and I biffed on the grammar, my bad...

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Janet riley sanderson's avatar

Loved this post. I ran a looping 100 this year as it was “convenient” after a “adventurous” mountain 100 DNF. Surprisingly, I enjoyed the loops. Like you mentioned the different times of day spiced it up and in the end I still ran into bears, felt challenged and had hallucinations which kept it interesting.

Next up for me is a non UTMB race in Europe which uses ITRA points, a system that UTMB ditched. I am fortunate as the UTMB CCC that I ran in 2020 was the last year before the Ironman conglomerate took over. There are plenty of beautiful alternate mountain races in Europe and the rest of the world.

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